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Topics and References 

FOR THE CLASS IN •> 4? 7 

American History 



State Agricultural College 

Manhattan, Kansas 



Ralph R. Price 

Professor of History and Civics 



PRINTING DEPARTMENT 
K. S. A. C. 



1905 



"?^.f- 



LIBRARY oi aONG«£ssl( 


Two Copies 


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Copyright, 1905, 

BY 

Ralph R. Price. 



PREFATORY NOTES. 



In the following pages, text references are always to 
paragraphs; other references are always to pages un- 
less otherwise designated. 

Always note the references given at the head of chap- 
ters and on the margins of our text. 

Study the map for every lesson. Geography and 
chronology are the two eyes of history. 

In addition to the text, you will do well to make a 
study of Channing and Hart's Guide to American His- 
tory. You will find interesting and helpful suggestions 
in C. K. Adams' Manual of Historical Literature, espe- 
cially pages 530-630. Another worthy book is Gordy and 
Twitchell's Pathfinder in American History. Read the 
Reviews of Books in the American Historical Review. 
Remember that familiarity with books is a valuable part 
of an education. 



4 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON I. 

a The French and Indian War, 1754-1763. 

«' The Seven Years' War in Europe. 
b Preceding French and Indian Wars. 

b^ Relation of each to its European War. 
c Extent of Enghsh Territory in America and Basis of 

the Claim. 
d Extent of French Territory in America and Basis of 

the Claim. 
e Events of the Wars, especially in America. 



Text, Channing's Students' Hist, of the U. S., 103-105. 
Guide, to American Hist., Channing & Hart, chap. XIII, 

pp. 281-283. 
Hart, Formation of the Union, chap. II, esp. pp. 23-24. 
Elson, Hist, of the U. S., pp. 160-193. Good book to own. 
Lalor, Cyclopaedia of Political Science, etc., article. Wars 

(In U. S. Hist.) I, French and Indian Wars, vol. 

Ill, pp. 1088-1089. By Alexander Johnston. 
Adams and Trent, Hist, of the U. S., pp. 73-86. 
McLaughlin, Hist, of the American Nation, ch. VI, esp. 

pp. 138-150. This is the Preparatory Depart- 
ment and State High School text. 
Davidson, Hist, of the U. S.— the State text, pp. 104-122. 
MacDonald, Select Charters, 1607-1775, pp. 261 and 267. 
Larned, History for Ready Reference, etc., pp. 2377, 

2898, and 3174. 
Sloane, The French Wars and the Revolution, chaps. 

II-IX. 
Fiske, Essays, vol. II, pp. 71-122, esp. 71-3, 77-91, 103, 5, 

9, 112-22. 
Roosevelt, Winning of the West, chap. I. 
Lalor, Art., United States of America, in vol. Ill, esp. 

pp. 989-1007. An excellent general viev^. Look 

this over at once and frequently refer to it. 
Historians' Hist, of the World, chap. VI of vol. XXIII. 
Wilson, George Washington. 

Amer. Hist. Rev., V : 659-75, IV : 1-20, VI : 197-234. 
C. K. Adams, Manual of Hist. Lit., esp. 530-630. 
Gordy and Twitchell, Pathfinder in Amer. Hist. 



NOTE BOOK. 



6 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON II. 

a Treaty of 1763, especially as to boundaries. 

1. See, also. Treaty of Utrecht, 1713. 
1} Proclamations of 1763 and 1764, especially as to the 

Quebec and Florida Boundaries and the West, 
c The Albany Congress of 1754. 



Text, 105-107. 

See references in lesson I. 

c Larned, Hist, for Eeady Reference, vol. 5, pp. 3175-8. 

Carson, 100th Anniversary, Constitution of the U. S., 

vol. II, pp. 439-503, esp. 467-72. 
MacDonald, Select Charters, etc., 253-7, 261-6, 267-71. 
Guide, 182, 188-9. 
Hinsdale, Amer. Gov't., 70, 423-49, esp. 433-7. 



NOTE BOOK. 



8 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON III. 

a English Constitutional History to 1760. 

6 Changes in the English Government, 1760-Geo. III. 

c Parliamentary Reform in England, 1832. 

d Compare the English and the American Ideas of Rep- 
resentation in 1776. 

e Colonial Policy of Great Britian — Then and Now. 

/ — Compare Other Nations. 

Q The Two Great Migrations to America — Puritan and 
Cavalier. 



Text, 108-112, 122-123. 

Fiske, Essays, vol. II, pp. 163-95, esp. 173-80. 

Lalor, Art., Navigation Act. 
" " Navigation Laws. 

" Revolution,The(InU.S.Hist.)— 1. Untill760. 

Siegnobos' Polit. Hist, of Europe, ch. II, esp. pp. 34-7, etc. 

Fyffe, Hist. Modern Europe, ch. XVI, pp. 643-5. 

See Guide, 311-15. 

Coman and Kendall, Hist, of Eng., pp. 381-4, 390-8, 408- 
22, 428-33, and later, 442, 452, 484. 

Wrong, Hist. Brit. Nation, 514-19. 

Montague, Elements of Eng. Const. Hist., esp. 203-15. 

Story, Miscellaneous Writings, 408-74. 

See Higginson and Channing, English History for Amer- 
icans, esp. 262-80, 313-18. The State text. 



NOTE BOOK. 



10 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON IV. 

a England's Government of Her American Colonies. 
a^ The Colonies had "Flourished in Neglect." 

h Difficulty of Enforcing English Laws and Regulations 
in America. 

c America in 1763. 

d Effects of the French and Indian Wars on America 
and on England. 

e The Stamp Act. 1. Its passage in English Parlia- 
ment. 2. Its nature. 3. Its justification. 4. 
Stamp Act Congress of 1765. 5. Repeal. 

/Why did America resist the Stamp Tax? 



Text, 113-126. 

Story, British Empire, vol. II, pp. 128-168, esp. 128-40. 

English author. 
Winsor, Narrative and Critical Hist., vol. VI, pp. 1-62. 
See Amer. Hist. Rev., Ill : 197-202. 
Fiske, Essays, vol. II, pp. 163-95, esp. 163-75, a' 87, 

cp. 82-7. 
Lalor, Art., Revolution, The (InU. S. Hist.)-II. 1760-66. 

Stamp Act Congress. 
Bryant and Gay, vol. Ill, ch. XIII. 
Earned, 3168-73, 3179-3203. 
MacDonald, Select Charters, 281-305, 313-17. 
Carson, Anniversary Const., II : 486-8. 
See Woodrow Wilson, The State, sees. 1011-64. 
Fiske, Civil Gov't., ch. I and pp. 140-59, esp. 156-9. 
Harper's Monthly, 103 : 285-300. 
See Guide, 182, 9. 



NOTE BOOK. 



11 



12 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON V. 

a The Townshend Acts, 1767. The Resistance. 

1. Compare with the Stamp Act. 
& The Boston Massacre, 1770. 
c The Boston Tea Party, 1773. 

d Repressive Acts of 1774. ' 'The Five Intolerable Acts. ' ' 
e Town Meetings. 
/ Committees of Correspondence. 
g First Continental Congress, 1774. 



Text, 127-138. 

Story, British Empire, vol. II, 141-68. 
Winsor, Nar. and Crit. Hist, of Amer., vol. VI, pp. 113-72. 
Fiske, Essays, vol. I, pp. 1-53, esp. 5, 12, 18-20, 23-4, 26- 
30, 33, 36-44. Also, vol. II, pp. 163-95, esp. 180-95. 
Lalor, Art., Revolution, The (in U. S. Hist.)— Ill and IV. 
Bryant and Gay, vol. Ill, ch. XIV. 
Earned, 3203-17. 

MacDonald, Select Charters, 356-61-7. 
Carson, Anniversary Const., II : 488-97. 
Hosmer, Samuel Adams. 
Sparks' Men Who Made the Nation, ch. 11. 
Tyler, Patrick Henry, 
Historians' History, 230-55. 
Amer. Hist. Rev., Ill : 266-9. 
Harper's, 103 : 465-74. 



NOTE BOOK. 



13 



14 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON VI. 

a Lexington, Concord, Bunker Hill and 

h Events Leading Immediately to the Declaration of In- 
dependence. 

c Second Continental Congress — date, place, personnel, 
acts. 



Text, 139-147. 

Story, British Empire, vol. II, pp. 169-93. 

Winsor, Nar. and Crit. Hist., vol. VI, pp. 231-52. 

Larned, 3218-32. 

Scott, Reconstruction During the Civil War, 43-80. 

Read Historians' Hist., vol. XXIII, pp. XIII-XXXV. 

Strong and S chafer, Government of the American 

People, 93-107. 
Lodge, George Washington. 
Fiske, Civil Gov't., 161-86. 
Harper's, 103 : 639-54. 
Guide, 189. 



NOTE BOOK. 15 



16 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON VII. 

a The Declaration of Independence. 

1. Full Discussion of Steps and Exact Dates. 

2. Study of its Contents. 

3. Renounce King or Parliament? 

6 Compare the American War of Independence (1776) 
with the Eng. Civil War (1642) and with the French 
Rev. (1789) as to Cause and Results. Conditions. 

c What was the American theory of the relation of the 
colonies to the English government as revealed in 
the Declaration of Independence. 

Text, 148 and pp. I-IV in back of text. 

Read — Study — The Declaration of Independence in back 
of text. 

MacDonald, Select Documents of U. S. Hist., 1776-1861, 
pp. 1-6. 
The Story of the Declaration of Independence. " — Gov't. 
Printing Office. 

Earned, vol. 5, pp. 3232-36. 

Guide, a 296, h 311-15. 

Elson, 250-4. 

Fiske's Essays, vol. I, ch. IV, esp. 145-57, Jj 153. Also, 
II : 170. 

Cooley, Principles of Constitutional Law, h 25. 

Hart, 77-80. 

Sloane, 224-231. Good. 

McLaughlin, 194-6. Read page 118. 

Davidson, 179-85. 

Sparks' Men, pp. 113-18. 

Read John Hancock's supposed speech against the Decl. 
of Ind., and John Adams' supposed speech favor- 
ing it, in Library of the World's Best Orations, 
vol. 10, pp. 3853 to 3856. Adams' supposed speech 
in Library of the World's Best Literature, vol. 
XXVII, p. 15748. 

Morse's Jefferson, 28-35. 

Eggleston, American Immortals, 3, 23, 43, 66. 

Parton, Peoples' Book of Biography, 173-80. 

Lalor, Arts., Declaration of Independence, and Revolu- 
tion IV. 



NOTE BOOK. 17 

Bryant and Gay, vol. Ill, ch. XIX. 

Webster's Great Speeches, 156-77, esp. 167-70. 

Goldwin Smith, 64-115. Entertaining. 

See Trevelyan, The Amer. Rev., esp. part II, vol. I, pp. 

155-71. Eng. 
See Moses Coyt Tyler, Lit. Hist, of the Amer. Rev., esp. 

vol. I, pp. 475-521. Also, vol. II, ch. XXV. Elegant. 
Morse, John Adams. 
Schouler, Thomas Jefferson, esp. ch. V. 
Woodburn, The American Republic, ch. I. 
Harper's, 103 : 791-807. 
Hinsdale, Amer. Gov't., ch. III. 



18 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON VIII. 

a The French Alliance, 1778. 
b The Close of the War. 

1. The Loyalists. 

2. Peace Negotiations. 

3. Treaty of Peace, 1783. Contents, including 

Boundaries. 
c The American Navy in the Revolutionary War. 
d Could America have won independence without the 
aid of Washington? Of Robert Morris? Of Prance? 

Text, 149-165, esp. 152, 162-164. 

MacDonald, 15-21. Study the treaty. 

Treaties and Conventions between the U. S. and For- 
eign Powers, 2 copies. Large edition, pp. 375-9, 
and small edition, pp. 314-18. 

Lecky's Amer. Rev., ch. XV. Eng. Excellent. 

Lecky, Eng. in the XVIII Cent., vol. IV, ch. XV, esp. 
255-88. 

Guide, 300-303. 

Hart, 95-9. 

Sloane, 355-69. 

Elson, 312-13. 

McLaughlin, 204 and 213. 

Davidson, 215-16. 

Larned, 3241-4, 56, 64, 68, 71-2, 77-89. 

McClure, vol. 8, p. 273, Benj. Frankhn. 

Sparks' Men, ch. IV, Robert Morris. 

Appletons' Amer. Biog., Arts., Franklin, Benj., Jay, 
Adams, J., etc. 

Winsor, Nar. and Crit. Hist., vol. VII, pp. 89-165, 185-215. 

Bryant and Gay, III : 618-23. 

Lodge, Short Hist, of the Eng. Colonies in Amer., esp. 
498-501, 517-21. 

Schouler, Table of Contents, so throughout the course. 

McMaster, Table of Contents, so throughout the course. 

Creasy, Fifteen Decisive Battles, ch. XIII, Saratoga. 

Historians' History, 255-84. 

Foster, A Century of American Diplomacy, esp. ch. II. 

American Historical Review, 1 : 24-45 and IV : 273-91. 

Mahan, Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660-1783. 

Harper's, 103 : 933-43. 



NOTE BOOK. 19 



20 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON IX. 

The Articles of Confederation. 
a Date. 

Ij Method of Adoption, 
c Contents. 
d Why They Failed. 

Text, 166-169. 

Study the Articles in Appendix to Civics text. 
MacDonald, 6-15. 
Guide, 304. Also, 190. 

Lalor, Art., Confederation, Articles of, vol. I, pp. 574-6. 
Congress, Continental. 
" Nation, The (in U. S. Hist.) I. 1732-89. 
Mace, Method in History, 129-44. Good. 
Hart, 103-5. 

Larned, 3252-6 and 3289-91. 

Story on the Constitution, sections, 218-43 (-71). 
McLaughlin, 216-20. 
Davidson, 221-4. 

Johnston's American Politics, 6-10. Good book to use. 
Sloane, 231-5, 284. 
Winsor, VII : 215-33. 
Schouler, Hist. U. S., vol. I, ch. I, sec. I. 
General Statutes of Kansas, 1901, pp. 4-10. 
Scott, Reconstruction, ch. V. 
Fiske, Civil Government, 140-212, esp. 187-212. 
Wilson, The State, sees. 1065-86. 
Black's Constitutional Lav^, ch. III. 
See Bancroft, History of the Formation of the Const. 
See Curtis, Const. Hist, of the U. S., 2 vols. 
See Thorpe, Const. Hist, of the Amer, People, 2 vols. 
Von Hoist, Const. Hist, of the U. S., vol. I, ch. I, esp. 

1-34, etc. 
Hinsdale, Amer. Gov't., chs. IV- VI. 
Kellogg and Taylor, The Government of the State and 

Nation, 163-77. The State text. 



NOTE BOOK. 



21 



22 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON X. 

a Western Lands. 
h Ordinance of 1787. 

1. Adoption and Importance. 

2. Contents. 

3. Compare with the Government of the Thirteen 

Colonies and of our Territories. 



Text, 170-174, esp. 173. 

Study tlie Ordinance in Appendix of Civics text. 

MacDonald, 21-29. 

Larned, vol. 4, pp. 2378-82. 

Guide, pp. 316-22. 

Hart, 93-5, 104, 107. 

Walker, The Making of the Nation, 39-40. 

McLaughlin, 220-4. 

Davidson, 221-7. 

Von Hoist, Const. Hist., vol. I, ch. I. 

Curtis, Const. Hist., vol. I, pp. 86, 98-103. 

Hinsdale's Old Northv^est. 

Hinsdale's American Government, 327-32. 

Roosevelt, Winning of the West, vol. Ill, ch. VI. 

Lalor, Art., Ordinance of 1787. 

Lalor, Art., Territories, esp. II and IV, pp. 919-20. 

Scott, Reconstruction, 189-92. 

Donaldson, Public Domain, 146-61. See also 56-88. 

Amer. Hist. Rev., V : 676-81. 



NOTE BOOK. 



23 



24 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XI. 

Period of the Confederation, 1781-1789. 
a Relations with England. 
h Relations with Spain. 
c Financial and Commercial Problems. 
d Genesis of the Constitutional Convention. 
e The Constitutional Convention, 1787. 1. Its per- 
sonnel. 2. Plans. 3. Compromises, etc. 
/ "The Critical Period of American History." 



Text, 174-180, esp. 179-80. 

See marginal references in text to Fiske's "Critical 

Period." 
Guide, 316-24, also, 182-3. 

Sparks' Men, ch. 5, Hamilton, esp. 151-72-80. See ch. 4. 
Hart, 89-93, sketch 102-19, 121-3. 
Walker, 1-32. 

Lalor, Art., Convention of 1787. 
" Nation, The, p. 930. 
Mace, Method in History, 129-44. Worth reading. 
Andrews' New Manual of the Constitution, 40-41. 
Adams and Trent, 180-84. 

Cambridge Modern History, vol. VII, ch. VIII. 
See Madison's Journal of the Constitutional Convention. 
McLaughlin, 224-32. 
Davidson, 221-9. 
Lodge's Hamilton, 48-64-(82). 

Lodge, Historical and Political Essays, 47-74, esp. 47-56. 
Appletons' Amer. Biog., Arts., Randolph, Edm., p. 176, 

and Madison, p. 165. 
Winsor, VII: 215-33, 237-55. 
Bryant, IV: 95-104. 
Sparks' U. S., 1 : 1-104. 
Goldwin Smith, 115-29. 
Earned, 3244-5, 89-01. 
Schouler, 1 : 36-46. 

Carson, 100th Anniversary, Const. U. S., vol. I, pp. 1-260. 
Historians' History, 284-99. 
Roosevelt, Gouverneur Morris. 
Story on the Constitution, sees. 243-80, esp. 272-80. 



» 



NOTE BOOK. 25 

Dewey, Financial Hist, of the U. S., 1-60, esp. 49-59. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, ch. I, esp. 34-54. 
Mag. Amer. Hist. XXIX : 305-31. 
Hinsdale, Amer. Gov't., chs. VI-IX. 
Strong and Schafer, Gov't. 108-59. 



26 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XII. 

The Constitution of the United States of America. 

a Written and Unwritten. Compare Great Britian. 
jj rpj^e Federal Principle, 
c Powers of Congress. 

1. Enumerated but Plenary. 

2. Reaches the Individual. 
d State's Rights. 

e The Federal Judiciary. 

1. Its Power Includes a New Principle of Govern- 

ment. 

2. Broad Construction the Rule. 
/ The Executive. 

Was the Constitution a new invention, theoretically 
ideal, or was it a skillful adaptation from practical 
experience? 



Text, 181-189. Excellent. 

Andrews' New Manual of the Constitution, and others. 

Guide, 326-28. Also 182-3. 

Hart, 124-8, 133. 

Walker, chaps. II and III. 

See reference to Bryce on margins of text. 

Bryce, American Commonwealth, vol. I, see table of 
contents. Read esp. pp. 19-37, /. e. , chaps. II and 
III in abridged edition, also chaps. XXIII and 
XXIV, i. e., chaps. XXII and XXIII in abridged 
edition. 

See also Bryce, chap. LII in abr. ed. or vol. II, part III. 

Lalor, Art. Construction (in U. S. Hist.), pp. 612-13. 
Constitution of the U. S. — IV., p. 610. 
Compromises (in U. S. Hist.), I-III. 
State Sovereignty. 

Johnston, American Pohtics, pp. 1-18. Good. 

Ex-Pres. Harrison, This Country of Ours, chaps. I and 
XX. 

Fiske, Essays, vol. I, ch. V, James Madison, The Con- 
structive Statesman. 

See Madison's Journal of the Constitutional Convention. 



NOTE BOOK. 27 

Compare text, p. 266 with Johnston, Amer. Pol. pp. 1-2. 

Schouler Hist. U. S., vol. I. 

Gen. Stat. Kan., 1901, pp. 11-21; and 1889, vol. I, pp. 27- 

37. Annotated. 
Scott, Reconstruction, chap. VI. 
Fiske, Civil Government, 140-278, esp. 212-67. 
Wilson, The State, sees. 1074-1351, esp. 1074-86 and 1260- 

1350. 
Woodburn, American Republic, ch. II. 
Black, Constitutional Law, ch. II, etc. 
Cooley, Constitutional Law, chaps. I, II, etc. 
Story on the Const, sees. 281-456, esp. 306-22. 
Wilson, Congressional Government, ch. I, Introductory. 
See Tiedeman, The Unwritten Constitution of the U. S. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, ch. II. 
Amer. Hist. Rev. V : 467-90. 

Hinsdale, Amer. Gov't., esp. chaps. XII and XIII. 
Strong and Schafer, esp. 160-71. 
Hart, Actual Government, esp. chap. III. 



28 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XIII. 

a Ratification of the Constitution. 

I) Origin of Political Parties, etc. 

c Attitude of Washington, Hamilton, Madison, Jeffer- 
son, Patrick Henry, and Samuel Adams, respec- 
tively, toward the Constitution. 

d Did the people of 1789 think they were ratifying the 
Constitution by States or by the People? 



Text, 270-275. 

Andrews' New Manual of the Constitution, ch. V. 

Wright and Kuhn, Civil Government, 40-9. 

Guide, 325-8. 

Hart, 128-35. 

Johnston, American Politics, 1-18. Excellent. 

Walker, ch. IV. 

Lalor, Art., Constitution of the U. S., II, Ratification. 
" " Construction. 

Parties, Political. 
" Federahst Party, The, pp. 165-6. 
" " Anti-Federal Party. 

State Sovereignty. 

Sparks' Men, chaps. V and VII, Hamilton and Jeffer- 
son, esp. 172-80. 

Schouler, vol. I, pp. 47-79. 

See "The Federalist." 

Fiske Essays, vol. I, ch. Ill, esp. 119-25, Hamilton. 

McLaughlin, 230-32. 

Davidson, 229-44. 

Compare text, p. 266 with Johnston, Amer. Pol. pp. 1-2. 

See also Bryce, Amer. Com., ch. 52 in ab. ed., or vol. II, 
part III. 

Lodge's Hamilton, esp. 64-82. 

Appletons' Amer. Biog., Arts., Henry, Patrick; Adams, 
Samuel; Madison, James, pp. 165-171. Also in 
Wilson's Presidents, pp. 88-106. 

Winson, VII: 237-55, 267-94. 

Sparks' U. S., 1:105-21. 

Larned, 3301-2. 

Macy, Political Parties in the U. S., chaps. II and XII. 



NOTE BOOK. 29 

Jefferson Davis, Rise and Fall of the Confed. Govt., 

1:94-115, etc. 
Scott, Reconstruction, chaps. VII, VIII, and IX. 
See Cooper's American Politics. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, ch. I, esp. 54-63. 
Hinsdale, Amer. Govt., chaps. X and XI. 



30 . AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XIV. 

a Organizing and Establishing a Government. 
Jj The Three Departments. 

1. Legislative. 2. Executive. 3. Judicial, 
c Hamilton's Financial Measures. 

1. Funding and (2) Assumption of the Debts. 

1^ Madison's Plan. V. Jefferson and the 
National Capital. 
d National Revenue. 

3. Tariff. 4. Excise and the Whisky Rebellion. 
(The National Bank — see next lesson). 
e The First and Second Presidential Elections. 
/Washington's Cabinets. 

Text, 190-196 (198). 

Guide, 183, 190. 

Johnston, American Politics, 19-24, 37. 

Hart, 140-51, 155, 163. 

Lalor, Art., Nation, The, (U. S.) II, 1789-1801. 

" Capital, The National (in U. S. Hist.). 
'I Federal Party I. 
" " Democratic-Republican Party I. 

Whisky Insurrection. 

Fiske, Essays, vol. I, ch. Ill, pp. 101-42, Alexander 
Hamilton and the Federal Party. 

Fiske, Essays, vol. I, ch. V, esp. 185, 206, James Mad- 
ison the Constructive Statesmen. 

Elson, 337-51. 

Walker, 73-81, 84-94, 97, 107, 123-6, 130. 

McLaughhn, 233-46. 

Davidson, 245-51. 

Lodge, Studies in Hist., pp. 132-81, esp. 149-60. 

Beacon Lights of Hist., vol. XI, pp. 173-214, Hamilton. 

Wilson's Presidents of the U. S., 19-29, Washington. 

Sparks' Men, chap. VI, Washington. 

Sparks' U. S., I: 122-221. 

Earned, 3302-5. 

McDonald, 46-58, 61-76. 

Dewey, Financial Hist, of the U. S., 56-9, 76, 89-96. 

Stanwood, A History of the Presidency, 1, 20, 32. 



NOTE BOOK. 31 

Boyd, Cases on Const. Law, p. 603, Chisholm v. Ga., 

11th Amendment. 
Morse's Jefferson, 87-106, etc. 
Lodge's Hamilton, esp. 83-98, etc. 
Trent, Southern Statesmen of the Old Regime, 3-45, 

esp. 29-45. 
Appletons' Cyclopasdia of Amer. Biography, 3 : 56-60. 
Goldwin Smith, 130-55. 
Lodge, George Washington. 
Dewey, Financial Hist., U. S., 60-118, esp. 89-96, 105-10, 

115-7. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, chap. III. 



32 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XV. 

a Slavery. 

1. In the States. 2. In the Territories. 3. Fugi- 
tive Slave Law of 1793. 
h The National Bank. 

1. Discussion of its Nature and of its Constitu- 
tionality. 2. Influence on Political Parties. 



Text, 197-199. 

Lalor, Art., Bank Controversies II. Excellent. 

Boyd, Cases on Const. Law, pp. 308-23, McCull. vs Md. 

Lalor, Art., Democratic-Republican Party II. 

U. S. Constitution, Art. IV, sec. 2, cl. 3. 

Lalor, Art., Fugitive Slave Laws I. Good. 

" Slavery (in U. S. Hist). 
Johnston, American Politics, 24-9. 
Hart, 150-7. 
Walker, 82-4, 108. 

MacDonald, 76-81 and 81-98, esp. 58-60. 
McLaughlin, 241-5. 
Lodge's Hamilton, 98-103, 129, etc. 
Earned, 3305, 15. 

Scott, Reconstruction, chaps. VIII and IX. 
Wilson, Rise and Fall of the Slave Power, esp. ch. VI of 

vol. I. 
Dewey, 98-104, 126-8. 



NOTE BOOK, 33 



34 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XVI. 

a Washington's Neutrality Proclamation, 1793. 
6 Our relations with Prance. 

1. Treaty of 1778. 2. Genet. 3. Democratic 
Clubs. 4. 1797. 
c Jay's Treaty and our relations with England, 1794, 
etc. 
1. Treatment of Washington and of Jay. 2. Its 
Justification. 3. Attitude of Prance. 
d. Our relations with Spain, 1795. 

1. Place of Deposit. 2. Plorida Boundary. 
e Has the House of Representatives a right to any con- 
trol over the making of a treaty? 
/Read Washington's Parewell Address. 



Text, 200-205. 
Johnston, 30-43. 
Hart, 157-63. 
Elson, 351-60. 
Walker, 99-103, 115-23. 
Adams and Trent, 200-4. 
Lalor, Art., Jay's Treaty. 

" Treaties of the U. S. 
McLaughlin, 246-50. 
Davidson, 251-3. 
MacDonald, a 112-14, c 114-30. 

I) Treaties and Con., smah ed., 318-32-6, large, 379-94-7. 
Appletons' American Biography, Art., Jay, John. 
Winsor, VII: 461-527. 
Earned, 3306-14, esp. / 3309-14. 
Pellew, John Jay. 
Read Historians' Hist. vol. XXIII, pp. I-XII. Also 299- 

319. 
Wilson, George Washington. 

Curtis, U. S. and Poreign Powers, chaps. X and XL 
Poster, Century of Amer. Diplomacy, esp. chap. V. 
Amer. Hist. Rev., IV: 62-79. 



NOTE BOOK. 35 



36 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XVII. 

a Election of John Adams, 1796. 

t* His Biography and a Discussion of the Man. 

cX.Y.Z. Mission — Breach with Prance. 

d Ahen and Sedition Laws. 

e Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. 

1. Dates. 2. Authors. 3. Contents. 4. Purpose. 
/Treaty with Prance, 1800. 

g The Judiciary Act and the Midnight Appointments. 
h Cabinet of John Adams. See Hamilton. 



Text, 206-10 and 212. 
Johnston, 41-54. 
Hart, 164-75. 
Walker, 132-56, 169. 
Elson, 360-75. 
McLaughlin, 252-7. 
Davidson, 255-60. 
Adams and Trent, 205-10. 
Lalor, Art., X. Y. Z. Mission. 

Alien and Sedition Laws. 

Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. Good. 
MacDonald, d 135-48, e 149-60. 
Earned, d 3314-18, e 3319-26. 

Wilson's Presidents, 36-60. Also in Appeltons'. 
Sparks' Men, 218-24. 

Beacon Lights of History, vol. XI, Adams. 
Lodge, Studies in History, 157-68. 
Powell, Nullification and Secession, chap II. 
Constitutional History as seen in American Law, 257. 
Morse's Jefferson, 172-3. 
Lodge's Hamilton, esp. 191-233. 
Bryant, IV: 127-45. 
Sparks' U. S. I: 222-58. 
Morse, John Adams. 
Scott, Reconstruction, 192-216. 
Curtis, U. S. and Foreign Powers, chap. XIII. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, chap. IV. 
Amer. Hist. Rev., IV: 292-312, V: 45-63, 225-52,682-6. 



NOTE BOOK. 



37 



38 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XVIII. 

a The Election of 1800. 

b Biography and Discussion of the Man Jefferson. 

c The Pohtical Revolution of 1801. 

d America in the Year 1800. 

e The Civil Service, Including the Judiciary. 

/ The Twelfth Amendment. 

Text, 211-226 and 229, esp. 222-226. 

Hart, 171-84. 

Walker, 156-73. 

Elson, 367-83, 403-5. 

Johnston, 52-8, 62. 

McLaughlin, 256,-61, 265-7. 

Davidson, 259-61. 

Adams and Trent, 211-14. 

Sparks' Men, 218-36, esp. 224-36. 

Piske, Essays, vol. I, ch. IV, Thomas Jefferson, the Con- 
servative Reformer, esp. 157-81. 

Stanv^ood, chap. IV. 

Lalor, Art., Disputed Elections I. Good. 

Democratic-Rex)ublican Party, esp. vol. I, p. 
772. 

Lalor, Art., Nation, The (in U. S. Hist.), Ill, 1801-15. 

Guide, 345. Also 191. 

Mace, Method in History, 170-191. 

See "Method of Teaching and Studying History" — 
Heath, p. 15. 

Trent, Southern Statesmen, pp. 49-86, Jefferson. 

Beacon Lights, vol. XI, Jefferson and Marshall. 

Goldwin Smith, pp. 154-8-66. Good. 

Boyd's Cases, 17-25, Marbury vs. Madison. See Civics. 

American Orations, 1 : 155-63. Jefferson's Inaugural. 
b Parton, Peoples' Book of Biography, 566, 346. 

Wilson's Presidents, 62-86, and Appletons' Amer. Biog., 
3:415-13. 

Sparks' U. S. 1 : 259-76. 

Larned, 3324-27. 

See Henry Adams, History of the U. S., vols. I-IV. 

Morse, Thomas Jefferson. 

Schouler, Thomas Jefferson. 



NOTE BOOK. 39 



Dewey, 118-42, esp. 119-23. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, ch. V. 
Amer. Hist. Rev., Ill : 270-91. 
Mag. of Amer. Hist., XXIX: 81-107. 



40 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XIX. 

a The Louisiana Purchase, 1803. 

1. Jefferson's Reasons for Purchasing. 

2. Napoleon's Reasons for SeUing to U. S. 

3. History of Louisiana, including 1541, 1673-82, 

1763, 1800, 1803, 1818, and 1819. 

4. Pull Discussion of Boundry. 

5. Constitutionality. 

b The Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1804-6. 
c Burr's Conspiracy. 



Text, 227, 228, and 230. 

Hart, 185-91. 

Walker, 177-85, 206-8. 

Elson, 383-94. 

McLaughlin, 261-5, 267-70. 

Davidson, 261-8. 

Burgess, The Middle Period, 20-24. An excellent vol- 
ume. 

Lalor, Art., Annexations I, vol. I, pp. 93-6. 

MacDonald, 160-5. Compare pp. 213-15. 

Treaties and Conv., small ed., 275-9; large ed., 331-4. 

Sparks' Men, 236-44. 

Sparks' U. S. I: 277-310. 

Adams and Trent, 214-20. 

Goldwin Smith, 158-61. Very readable. 

Guide, 347-9. 

Hinsdale, How to Study and Teach History, 255-64. 

Industrialist, vol. 30, No. 23. 

"The Louisiana Purchase, and Our Title West," etc. 
Gov. Pub. 

See "The Province and the States," 7 vols. 

Powell, Nullification and Secession, chaps. Ill and IV. 

See Sparks' The Expansion of the Amer. People, 188- 
210. Good. 

Bryant and Gay, Hist. U. S., vol. 4: 145-9. 

Ellis, vol. II. 

Earned, 3327-31, 34-5. 

American Orations, vol. I, pp. 180-204. Admission of 
Louisiana. 



NOTE BOOK. 41 

Morse's Jefferson, 206-29, 246. 

Winsor, VII : 527-63. 

Roosevelt, Winning of the West, vol. IV, chaps. VI and 
VII. 

Semple, American History and its Geographic Condi- 
tions, 93-114. Be sure to note this book. 

Adams, Hist. U. S., 1 : 352 to II : 134. 

Gen. Stat. Kan., 1901, pp. 22-4. Also 1889, vol. I, pp. 38-41. 

Scott, Reconstruction, 216. 

Wheeler, Trail of Lewis and Clark, 2 vols. 

Coues, History of the Levels and Clark Expedition, 4 vols. 

Poster, Century of American Diplomacy, ch. VI. 

Donaldson, Public Domain, 89-108. 

Appletons' Amer. Biog., Art. Burr, Aaron, pp. 465-7. 

Amer. Hist. Rev., IV: 439-55. 



42 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSSON XX. 

a Napoleon Bonaparte vs. England, 1803 to Waterloo, 

1815. 
I) Attacks on Neutral Trade. 

Napoleon's Decrees and England's Orders in Council, 
c The Impressment Controversy v^ith England. 
d Jefferson's Embargo Policy. 

1. Precedents. 2. Constitutionality. 3. Effects on 
Eno:land: on France: in America. 



Text, 231-238. 

Hart, 191-203. 

Walker, 190-204, 217-22. 

Elson, 394-407. 

McLaughlin, 271-9. 

Davidson, 268-77. 

Adams and Trent, 219-24 (Eng?). 

Goldwin Smith, 161-6 (Eng.). 

Sparks' Men, 244-54. 

Guide, 350-2. 

MacDonald, 176-83. 

Schwill, History of Modern Europe, 320-2. 

Lalor, Art., Embargo (in U. S. Hist.). 

Earned, 3332-37. 



NOTE BOOK. 43 



44 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXI. 

War of 1812. " Second War of Independence." 

ff Causes. New Men. "Mr. Madison's War." 
h Plans and Preparation for War. 
c Events on Land. 
d Events on Sea. 
e Treaty of Ghent, 1814. 
/ Results and Effects of the War. 
g Hartford Convention, 1814. Justification. Im- 
portance. 
Was it fortunate or unfortunate that the battle of 

New Orleans v/as fought? 
Who was the real enemy? Who won? 
Did we, single handed, defeat England in the War of 
1812? In the Revolutionary War? 

Text, 239-248. 
Hart, 203-31. 
Elson, 408-50, esp. 443-8. 
Walker, 223-7, 230-48. Good. 
Lalor, Art., Wars (in U. S. Hist.) IV. 
Gunboat System. 
Convention, The Hartford. 
McLaughlin, (275-) 281-92, (-95). 
Davidson, 277-86. 
Guide, 352-8. 

Mace, Method in History, 170-91. 
Higginson, History of the U. S., chap XV. 
Johnston, 73-88. 
Powell, chap. V. 
MacDonald, 191-8. 

Treaties and Conven. small ed. 338-44; large ed. 399-405. 
Adams and Trent (Eng.?), chap XVI. 
Goldwin Smith (Canadian), 165-176. Be sure to read 

this. 
Green, Short Hist, of the Eng. People (Eng.), 827-8, 832-4. 
Gardiner, Students' History of England (Eng.) 872-73. 
Mahan, The War of 1812, Scribners's Mag., July and 

Sept., 1904. 
Roosevelt, Naval War of 1812. 



NOTE BOOK. 45 

Sparks' Men, 267-70, 282. Suggestive. 

American Orations' 1 : 205-15. Clay on War. 

Summer's Jackson, 41-53, etc. 

Schurz, Clay, 1 : 67-125. 

Parton, Peoples' Book of Biography, 574. 

Goldwin Smith, The United Kingdom, vol. II, pp. 307-8. 

Winsor, VII : 357-413. 

Sparks' U. S., I: 311-35. 

Larned, 3337-59, esp. 52, 58-9, a 41, 54, e 54-58. 

Henry Adams, History U. S. vols. V-IX, esp. VIII : 367- 

IX: 242. 
Historians' History, 320-46-51. 
Semple, 134-49. 

Bryant, IV : 180-246, esp. 180-4 and 225-46. 
Gay, James Madison. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, ch. VI. 
Mag. Amer. Hist. XXIX : 419-39. 



46 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXII. 

New School of Statesmen, 1812-1850. The Middle 
Period. 

a Henry Clay of Kentucky. 

h Daniel Webster of Massachusetts (N. H. ?). 

c John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. 

d Andrew Jackson of Tennessee (S. C. ?). 
Secondary to the above. 

e John Quincy Adams, of Massachusetts. 

/Thomas Hart Benton, of Missouri. 

g Lewis Cass, of Michigan. 



Text, 239. 

Sparks' Men, ch. VIII Clay, IX Jackson, X Webster. 

Beacon Lights, vol. XII, Jackson, Clay, Webster, Cal- 
houn. 

Burgess, The Middle Period, Preface and chapter I. 
Excellent. 

PoUett, The Speaker of the House of Reps., 69-82. Clay. 

Trent, Southern Statesmen, 153 ff. Calhoun. 

Lodge, Studies in History, 294-330, Webster. 

Wilson's Presidents, 137-67, Jackson. 

Everybody's Magazine, January, 1903, pp. 73-82, Jackson. 

McLaughhn, 279-80. 

Elson, 413-14. 

"Methods of Teaching and Studying History," Heath, 
p. 15. 

See Biographies in the Statesmen Series. 

Fiske, Essays, vol. I, chap. IX, esp. 367, 373-80, 384-5. 
Webster. 

Schurz, Clay, esp. 1 : 126-171, 311-50. 

Eggleston, American Immortals, esp. h 99-125, a 125-75. 

Appletons' American Biography for each name. 



NOTE BOOK. 47 



48 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXIII. 

a Nationalism. 
h Provincialism, 
c The West. 
d The South. 
e New England. 

/Protective Tariff of 1816 and /^ Internal Improve- 
ments. 
g Relations v^ith England. Treaty of 1818. 
h Supreme Court Decisions. 
i The National Bank Rechartered, 1816. 

Text, 248-55. 

Hart, 223-31, h 234-6, 253. 
Walker, chap. XIII, esp. h 252-3, and 257-62. 
h Boyd, 308, McCul. vs. Md. 
Burgess, Preface and chapter I. Excellent. 
Guide, 356-59. Study these pages. Also, 191. 
Lalor, Art., Tariffs of the U. S., vol. Ill, pp. 859-60'. 
" Nation, The (in U. S. Hist.), IV, 1815-65. 
McLaughlin, 292-4, 296-302. 
Elson, 451. 

Higginson, Hist. U. S., chap. XVI, pp. 381-405. 
f Sparks' Men, 264-81. 

Treaties and Con., small ed. 350-2, large ed. 415-18. 
Dewey, Financial Hist. U. S., 143-72, esp. 144-50, 161-5. 
Piske, Essays, I, chs. VI and VII, Jackson, the Fron- 
tiersman, esp. 228, h 267. 
It Beacon Lights of Hist., vol. XI, Marshall, esp. 344 ff. 
American Orations IV: 202-37; also, 191-201. 
li Eggleston's Amer. Immortals, 175-86, 192. 
h Appletons' Amer. Biog., Art. Marshall, John, pp. 222-4. 
c Semple, 150-77. 
Sparks' U.S., I: 336-57. 
Larned, 3359-60. 
Magruder, John Marshall. 
h Story, Miscellaneous Writings, 639-97. 



NOTE BOOK. 49 



50 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXIV. 

a The Seminole War and 
h The Florida Treaty, 1819. 

Review the History of Florida, the Louisiana Pur- 
chase and our relations with Spain, 1776-1819. 
c The Monroe Doctrine, 1823. 

1. Its Author. 2. Its Contents. 3. Occasion for 
its Issuance. 4. President Roosevelt and 
Santo Domingo, 1905. 



Text, b 255-7 and see 105-6, 164, c 258-60. 

Hart, h 231-4 and see 187, 249, c 241-4 

Burgess, h chap. II, c 122-28. 

Elson h 454-6, c 462-4, 476. 

Lalor, Art., Annexations II, Florida, p. 96. 
Monroe Doctrine. 

MacDonald, h 213-19, c 228-31. 

I) Treaties and Conv. small ed. 785-94, large ed. 1016-22. 

McLaughhn, 302, 307-9. 

Guide, 359-61, 362-3. Very good. 

Johnston, 89-92, 99. 

c Cleveland, Presidential Problems, 171-281. Venezu- 
ela, 1896. 

Wilson's Presidents, 107-18. Also in Appletons'. 

Larned, 3362-3 and Art., Florida, 1819-21. 

Davidson, 288-9, 291. 

Sumner's Jackson, 60-89. 

Bryant, IV: 246-59. 

Roosevelt, American Ideals, ch. XI, Monroe Doctrine. 

Sparks' U. S., 1:383-400. 

Oilman, James Monroe. 

See Historians' Hist., pp. XX, 350, 581-96, 621-38, esp. 
630-5. 

Curtis, U. S. and Foreign Powers, chaps. VII and XIV. 

Foster, Century of American Diplomacy, ch. XII. 



NOTE BOOK. 51 



I 



52 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXV. 

The Missouri Compromise, 1820. See 1821. 



Text, 261-2. 

Hart, 236-41. 

Burgess, chap. IV. See chap. III. 

Elson, 456-62. 

Lalor, Art., Compromises IV, Missouri Compromise, 

549-52. 
Lalor, Art., States, Constitutional and Legal Diversities 

in. 
Greeley's American Conflict, vol. I, chap. VII, The Mo. 

Struggle. 
Scott, Reconstruction, chap. X, esp. 216-27. 
MacDonald, 219-26, esp. sec. 8, p. 224. 
Guide, 361-2. 
McLaugWin, 303-7. 
Davidson, 289-90. 
Amer. Orations, 11:33-62, King, N. Y., 63-101, Pinkney, 

Md. 
Schurz, Clay, 1:172-202. 
Bryant, IV, 260-74. 
Sparks' U. S., 1:358-82. 
Larned, 3360-62. 

Rhodes, Hist. U. S. since 1850, vol. I, pp. 30-40. 
Historians' History, 345-53. 
Carr, Missouri. 

Von Hoist, vol. I chaps. VII-X. 
Story, Miscellaneous Writings, 122-47. 



NOTE BOOK. 53 



I 



I 



54 AMERICAN HISTORY 



LESSON XXVI. 



a The Era of Good Feeling. 

6 Methods of Nominating Candidates for President, 

1789-1832. 
c Candidates for President in 1824 — PoUtical Party? 
d Election of 1824. 



Text, 264. 

Hart, 245-51. 

Burgess, chap. VI, and p. 129. 

Stanwood, chap. XI, 125-41. 

Hinsdale, American Government, 260-4. 

Earned, 3362-6. 

Elson, 465, 468, 469. 

McLaughlin, 296, 309-17. 

Davidson, 287-93. 

Johnston, 100-2. 

Sumner's Jackson, 92-128. 

Lalor, Art., Caucus, The Congressional. 

Nominating Conventions. 

Party Government in the United States. 
" Disputed Elections II, p. 808. 
Adams, John Randolph, esp. chap. XL 
Amer. Hist. Rev., V : 64-82, 253-83. 



NOTE BOOK. 55 



I 



I 



56 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXVII. 

a John Quincy Adams. The Man. His Biography. 
I) Administration of John Quincy Adams, 1825-29. 

1. The Panama Congress. 

2. Adams and Georgia. 

(Jackson and Georgia), 
c Compare John Adams and J. Q. Adams. — Their time, 
poUtical conditions, etc. 

Text, 265-267. 

Hart 251-6 

Burgess, 129, 144, 157, 210-20 (-41). 

Elson, 469-72. 

McLaughlin, 317-18. 

Davidson, 293-7. 

Higginson, chap. XVII, 406-30. 

Wilson's Presidents, 120-33, alsoin Appletons' American 

Biog. 
Guide, 364-5. 

Sumner's Jackson, 129-150. 
Lalor, Art., Cherokee Case. 
Bryant, IV: 280-91. 
Morse, John Quincy Adams. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, chap. XL 
Story, Miscellaneous Writings, 340-78. 
Scribner's Magazine, 13 : 389-92. 



NOTE BOOK. 57 



i 



58 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXVIII. 

a Tariff Measures, 1789 to 1828. (1832). 

a^ Especially the "Tariff of Abominations," 1828. 
b Internal Improvements. Esp. since 1812. 

1. Wagon roads. 2. Canals. 3. (Railroads). 4. In- 
ventions. 
c Attitude of: 1. Calhoun, 2. Webster, 3. Clay on 
Protective Tariff and Internal Improvements. 
See Clay's "Genuine American Policy." 



Text, 194, 250-52, 254, 263, 268, 269, 275-7, (282-4). 

Hart, 146-8, 223-31, 247-8, 253, 257-8, and 

Wilson, 39-43, 48-52, (65-8). 

Walker, 84-7, 254-61, and 

Burgess, 108-22, 157-63. 

Elson, 343, 453, 465, 472-6, 485-92. 

McLaughlin, 235, 293, 309, 319, 328. 

Davidson, See Index, "Tariff, The." 

Sparks' Men, 264-81. 

Shaler, the U. S., vol. II, pp. 65-131. 

Lalor, Art., Tariffs of the U. S. 

Internal Improvements. 

Dewey, Financial Hist, of the U. S., 80-5, 161-5, 173-96. 

Holies, Financial Hist, of the U. S., 1789-1860, 73-103, 359- 
434, etc. 

Taussig, Tariff Hist, of the U. S., 14, 18, 68-115, etc. 

American Orations, IV: 191-201, 202-37, Clay; 238-69, 
Hurd. 

Appleton's American Biog., Arts. Calhoun, Clay, Web- 
ster etc. 

Sparks' U.' S., 1 : 401-25, II : 19-36, 65-88. 

Larned, 3065-71. 

Amer. Hist. Rev., VI : 19-37. 



NOTE BOOK. 59 



60 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXIX. 

a Election of 1828 (and 1832). 

Jj Its Significance, or Political Revolution of 1829. 

c Political, Economic and Social Conditions, 1829. 

d Andrew Jackson. 1. The Man. 2. His Biography. 

3. His Policy. 
e The Civil Service and Spoils of Office. Cp. Jefferson. 
/Compare Andrew Jackson, Thomas Jefferson and 
Abraham Lincoln. 

Text, 270-280. 

Hart, 259-62. 

Elson, 472, 478-85, 498-501. 

Wilson, Division and Reunion, 1-38, 61-4. 

Burgess, 163-5. 

McLaughlin, 320-25, 332-38. 

Davidson, 296-311. 

Johnston, 107-17. 

Stanwood, 142-50. 

d Everybody's Magazine, January, 1903, 73-82. Inter- 
esting. 

Sparks' Men, chap IX. 

Sumner's Jackson, 179-83. 

Wilson's Presidents, 137-67, alsoin Appletons' American 
Biog. 

Higginson, ch. XVIII, Old Hickory. 

Guide, 366-9. Also 184 and 192. 

Bryce, American Commonwealth, vol. I, pp. 61-5. 

Cleveland, Presidential Problems, 3-79, esp. 29, 35, 46. 

Piske, Essays, vol. I, ch. VI and VII, Jackson, esp. 230, 
5, 7, 41, 4, 48-51, 7, 67, 83, 6, 8, 91, 5, 8, 305, 9, 11, 44. 

e American Orations, IV : 288-95; 367-99, Curtis, 400-20, 
Schurz. 

Summer's Jackson, 176-213, etc. 

d Parton, Peoples' Book of Biography, 593. 

Lalor, Art., Democratic-Republican Party IV. 
" " Spoils System. 

" Veto. 
" Suffrage, esp. pp. 825-33. 

Bryant, IV : 291-315. 

Sparks, U. S., II : 1-18. 



I 



NOTE BOOK. 61 

Webster's Great Speeches, 347-58, 367-93, 393-406. 

Macy, chap. IV. 

Mag. of Amer. Hist., XXIX : 542-4. 

Amer. Hist. Rev., II : 665-74. 

Piske, Civil Gov't., 257-67. 



62 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXX. 

a Webster and Hayne — Great Debate in Senate, 1830. 

J) Nullification and Secession. States' Rights vs. Union. 

c 1. Protective Tariff of 1832. 2. South CaroUna Nul- 
lification. 3. The Force Bill. 4. Compromise 
Tariff of 1833. 

f? Jackson and Calhoun. (See Jefferson's Birthday 
Toast, April 13, 1830.) 

e When and why did Calhoun and South Carolina change 
their attitude toward nationalism? 



Text, 281-284. 

Guide, 370. 

Rhodes, Hist. U. S. since Comp. of 1850, vol. I, pp. 40-53. 

Excellent. 
Burgess, chaps. VIII and X. 
Wilson, a h 38-48, c 48-68, d 52-5. 
Sparks' Men, ch. X, esp. 318-35. 
Sparks' U. S., 11:49-64. 
Elson, 485-92. 
Johnston, 111-17. 
McLaughlin, 325-29. 
Davidson, 314-15. 
Everybody's Magazine, January, 1903, pp. 73-82. Worth 

Reading. 
Lalor, Art., Foote's Resolution, 234. 

" NulUfication (in U. S. Hist.), vol. II, 1051 
" Secession, vol. Ill, 693-6. 
" Daniel Webster. 
MacDonald, 239-59, 268-73. 
Larned, 3366-9. 
Alden's Cycl. of Universal Literature, vol. XX, Daniel 

Webster, 5-9. 
Library of the World's Best Orations, vol. X, pp. 3756- 

3828. 
Library of the World's Best Literature, vol. XXVII, pp. 

15725-35, is biography of Webster by Schurz. 

Read 15743-6 and 15748. 
Lodge, Studies in History, 305-8. 
Fiske, Essays, vol. I, a 386-91, 398, h 391-5. 
American Orations, I : a 233-302, c 303-19. 



> 



NOTE BOOK. 63 

Sumner's Jackson, a 229-34, b and c 246-64, 322-76. 
Greeley's American Conflict, vol. I, ch. VIII. 
PoweU, Nullification and Secession, chap. VI. 
Webster's Great Speeches, 227-72, 273-307, 458-70. 
Moore, American Eloquence, II : 357, 370-99, 555-78. 
Von Hoist, vol. I, ch. XII. 



> 



-5 



64 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXXI. 

a Slavery and Anti-Slavery Agitation, about 1831. 

h Abolition Movement. — Wm. Lloyd Garrison, Wendell 

Phillips, etc. 
c Anti-Slavery Petitions in Congress. — J. Q. Adams. 



Text, 385-88. 
Guide, 375-80. 
Burgess, chaps. X and XI. 
Lalor, Art., Abolition and Abolitionists. 
" Petition (in U. S. Hist.). 
" Slavery (in U. S.). 
Rhodes, U. S. since 1850, vol. I, pp. 53-75. 
Elson, 509-13. 
Wilson, 114. 
Sparks' Men, chap. XI. 
Davidson, 327-29. Read this. 
American Orations, II : 102-14, 219-67, Wendell PhiUips; 

115-22, John Quincy Adams. 
Schurz, Clay, II : 69-94. 
Appleton, Arts. Garrison, Phillips, Lovejoy, Adams, 

J. Q., etc. 
Greeley, American Conflict. I : chaps. IX-XI. 
Bryant, IV : 315-49. 
Sparks' U. S., 11:89-109. 
Larned, 3369-71, 73, 75-6, 78. 
Hart, Salmon P. Chase. 
William Lloyd Garrison, 2 vols. 
Wilson, Slave Pov^er, esp. vol. I, chaps. XIII, XXV. 
Mag. of Amer. Hist., XXIX : 394-5. 
Scribner's Magazine, 13 : 389-92. 



NOTE BOOK. 65 



66 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXXII. 

a "The Reign of Andrew Jackson," 1829-1837. 
b The National Bank. 1791-1811 and 1816-1836. 

1. Right and Wisdom of Veto. 

2. Compare with Present National Banks, 
c Removal of the Deposits. 

d Distribution of the Surplus. 
e The Specie Circular. 
(Crisis of 1837). 



Text, 289-293. 

Wilson, 69-92. Full and clear. 
Burgess, chap. IX. See pp. 1-8. 
Lalor, Art., Bank Controversies, 199 ff. 

" " Deposits, Removal of . 

" " United States Surplus Money, Distribution 

of, among the States. 
Elson, 492-6. 
Johnston, 100-30. 
McLaughlin, 329-32. 
Davidson, 311-14. 

Dewey, Financial History U. S., 197-229; also, 145-61. 
Sparks' Men, chap. IX. 
Beacon Lights, vol. XII, esp. 57-71. 
Guide, 369, 372-74. 

MacDonald, 238, 259-68, 271, 289-303, 306-33. 
Fiske, Essays, vol. I, pp. 343-48. 

American Orations, 1 : 320-34. Benton on Expunging. 
Sumner's Jackson, b 264-321, 339-401. 
Schurz, Clay, II : 23-51, 99-106. 
Wilson's Presidents, 137-67. Also, in Appletons'. 
Larned, 3371-5. 
Goldwin Smith, 177-207. 
Webster's Great Speeches, 320-38. 
Roosevelt, Thomas H. Benton. 
Historians' History, 351-65. 
Benton, Thirty Years' View (U. S. Senate). 
White, Money and Banking, 258-313. 



NOTE BOOK. 67 



68 AMERICAN HISTORY 



LESSON XXXIII. 



a VanBuren's Administration, 1837-1841. 

h The Man and his Relations with Jackson. 

c Panic of 1837. 

d The Independent Treasury Act. "Subtreasury." 



Text, 294. 

Elson, 501-5. 

Johnston, 127-37. 

Adams and Trent, 286-90. 

McLaugWin, 339-48. 

Davidson, 317-20. 

"Wilson, 28, 32-3, 55, 63, 84, 93-101. 

Wilson's Presidents, 169-85. Also, in Appletons'. 

Guide, 381. 

Shepard's VanBuren (S. S.), p. 67, etc. 

Schurz, Clay, II : 113-51. 

Lalor, Art., Independent Treasury. 

Juglar, History of Panics in U. S., 58-74. 

Dewey, ch. X. 



NOTE BOOK. 69 



I 



70 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXXIV. 

a Campaign and Election of 1840. 

Party Platforms, Candidates, etc. 
h Harrison, the Man and his Biography, 
c Tyler, the Man and his Biography. His Politics. 
d Harrison and Tyler's Administration. 

1. The National Bank. Tariff of 1842. 

2. The Webster-Ashburton Treaty, 1842. 

e Why was neither Webster nor Clay ever elected Pres- 
ident? 



Text, 295-297, last of 299. 

Guide, 382-5. 

Burgess, 278-86. 

Stanwood, 190-205. 

Elson, 505-7, 513-16. 

Johnston, 137-42. 

Wilson, 101, 133-41. 

Wilson's Presidents, 185-216. 

Appletons', Arts., Harrison, W. H., and Tyler. 

McLaughlin, 345-58. 

Davidson, 320-33. 

Adams and Trent, 290-93. 

Lalor, Art., Maine-Boundaries I, vol. II, pp. 804-5. 

Whig Party. 
MacDonald, 335-43. 
Lodge, Studies in History, 316-17. 

Fiske, Essays, vol. I, ch. VIII, esp. 321, 35, 9, 40, 42-48, 350. 
e Sumners's Jackson, (164-288), 289-321. 
e Schurz, Clay, 1 : 203-36, etc., 350, II : 171-227, 328-46, etc. 
Sparks' Men, 347-58, etc. 
Larned, 3377-9. 



NOTE BOOK. 71 



72 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXXV. 

a The Annexation of Texas, 1845. 

1. History of Texas. 

2. Sam. Houston, Tyler, Polk, Calhoun and Texas. 

3. Method of Annexation — Why? Constitutionality. 
b Election of 1844 — Candidates and Platforms. 

c Explain "Re-occupation of Oregon and Re-annexation 
of Texas." 



Text, 298-299. 

Guide, 385-7. Also, 192-3. 

Lalor, Art., Annexation III, Texas, 96-8. 

" Texas. 
Burgess, 289-311. 
Rhodes, 1 : 75-85. 
Wilson, 141-7. 
Elson, 516-22. 
McLaughlin, 353-8. 
Davidson, 329-31. 
Adams and Trent, 293-6. 
Johnston, 142-50. 
Wilson's Presidents, 216-33. 
MacDonald, 343-6. 
Stanwood, 206-25. 
Sumner's Jackson, 412-22, 457-9. 
Apple tons' American Biog. See names cited in a2. 
Greeley, I : chap. XII. 
Bryant, IV : 361-9. 
Sparks' U. S., 11:118-26. 
Lamed, Art., Texas. 
Historians' History, 366-77-383. 
Garrison, Texas. 

Wilson, Slave Power, I : chaps. XLII, XLIII, and XLV. 
Donaldson, Public Domain, 120-4. 
Mag. of Amer. Hist., XXIX : 235-41. 



NOTE BOOK. 73 



74 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXXVI. 

a The Mexican War, 1846-1848. 

1. Trace the Causes — Remote and Proximate. 

2. Chief Events of the War— Taylor, Scott, Fre- 

mont, etc. 

3. Discuss fully all the results of the War. 
h "Fifty-four Forty or Fight." 

1. Origin and Reason for the Phrase. 

2. Original Establishment of this Line. Its Location. 
c The Oregon Treaty of 1846. 

1. Our Claim to Oregon. 



Text, 300-301. 

Lalor, Art., Wars V, The Mexican War, 1090-92. 

Northwest Boundary. 
Rhodes, 86-95. 
McLaughlin, 359-68. 
Davidson, 329-46. Worth Reading. 
Elson, 523-33. 
Wilson, 147, 149-57. 
Burgess, chaps. XIV-XVI. 
Adams and Trent, 296-304. 
MacDonald, «3. 365-72, c 355-8. 
Guide, 387. 

Amer. Hist. Rev., V: 491-502, VI : 226-300. 
Sparks' U. S., 11:126-48. 
Larned, Arts., Texas, Mexico, Oregon. 



NOTE BOOK. ^0 



AMERICAN HISTORY 



LESSON XXXVII. 



a The Walker Tariff of 1846— and Prosperity to 1857. 

b California and the Forty-niners. 

c The Wilmot Proviso— and 36° 30^ 

d Election of 1848 — Candidates and Platforms. 



Text, 302-306, 323-4. 

Guide, 387-91. 

Davidson, 342-50. 

McLaughlin, 368-75. 

Rhodes, 1 : 90-8. 

Wilson, 157-60. 

Elson, 524, 533-40. 

Johnston, 153-61. 

Adams and Trent, 304-7. 

Wilson's Presidents, 233-62. 

Appletons', Arts., Taylor and Fillmore. 

Stanwood, 226-43. 

Lalor, Art., Wilmot Proviso. 

Greeley, vol. I, chap. XIV. 

Lamed, 3380-1. Also, 3075-6. 

Wright, Industrial Evolution of the U. S., esp. part II. 

Dewey, ch. XI. 



NOTE BOOK. 



AMERICAN HISTORY 



LESSON XXXVIII. 



a The Compromise of 1850. 

1. Clay's Speech of February 5th. Also, July 22nd. 

2. Calhoun's Speech of March 4th. 

3. "Webster's "Seventh of March Speech." 

4. Seward's "Higher Law" Speech of March 11th. 
h The Fugitive Slave Laws of 1793 and 1850. 

1. Prigg -y.s. Pennsylvania, 
c The Election of 1852 — Side Light on the Compromise. 



Text, 307-309. 

Guide, 391-4. 

Schurz, Henry Clay, II : 315-414, esp. 328-46. 

Lodge, Daniel Webster, 300-16. 

VonHolst, John C. Calhoun, 334-52. 

Lothrop, Wm. H. Seward, 80-105, esp. 80-97. 

Hart, Salmon P. Chase, 124-31. 

Trent, Southern Statesmen of the Old Regime, 153-93. 

Lodge, Studies in History, 318-24. 

Beacon Lights, XII : 1. 127-37, 2. 229-37, 3. 167-85. 

Sparks' Men, ch. X, 3. and h esp. 333-46. 

Wm. G. Brown, Stephen Arnold Douglas, 70-8. 

Greeley, The American Conflict, 1 : 198-224. 

Rhodes, 1 : 24, 111-96, esp. 123, 7, 44, 54, 63, 85, 87-9, 94-6, 

207, 222. 
Burgess, 340-80. 
Elson, 540-60, 566-9. 
Wilson, 165-82. 
Appletons' Biographies. 
Lalor, Art., Compromises V. 

" " Fugitive Slave Laws. 

" " Personal Liberty Laws. 

Mace, Method in Hist., 216-38. An excellent general 

view. 
Hinsdale, How to Study and Teach History, 306-11. 
MacDonald, 378-90. 
McLaughlin, 375-86. 
Davidson, 346-56. 
Johnston, 160-6. 
Adams and Trent, 308-20. 



NOTE BOOK. 79 

Larned, Art., U. S. in 1850, vol. 5, pp. 3383-92, 79-80. 

Cambridge Modern History, VII : 405-19, esp. 416-19. 

Scribner's Magazine, May and June, 1905. Webster 
and Calhoun. 

Fiske's Essays, vol. I, pp. 402-9. See 398-402. 

American Orations II : 2. 123-60, 3. 161-201, 1. 202-18, 
h 268-340. 

Sparks' U. S., II : 149-90. 

Bryant, IV: 387-405. 

Webster's Great Speeches, 600-25. 

Historians' History, 377-91. See also, 366-76. 

Macy, chaps. VII, IX-XI. 

Wilson's Slave Power, esp. vol. II, ch. XX, XXII, etc.. 

New International Encyclopaedia, Art., Prigg vs. Penn- 
sylvania. 



80 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XXXIX. 

The Kansas-Nebraska BiU, 1854— May 30th. 
a Compare Compromise of 1820. 
b Compare Compromise of 1850. 
c Discuss Popular Sovereignty. 
d Stephen Arnold Douglas— "Little Giant" of Illi- 
nois. 

e The Anti-Nebraska Men — Republican Party. 



Text, 310-312. 

Guide, 394-7. 

Burgess, 380-407. 

Wilson, 182-5. 

Elson, 569-86. 

Rhodes, 1 : 424-500, etc. 

McLaughlin, 386-94. 

Davidson, 356-62. 

Lalor, Art., Kansas -Nebraska Bill. 

Popular Sovereignty. 
Greeley, American Conflict, 1 : 324-51. 
Hodder, Local Government of Kansas, 5-9. 
Johnston, 167-78. 
Adams and Trent, 320-5. 
Roosevelt's Thomas H. Benton, 348-52. 
Brown's Stephen A. Douglas, esp. 46, 59, 71-2, 81-98. 
Mace, Method in History, 216-38. 
Wilson's Presidents, 262-77. 
MacDonald, 395-405. 
Larned, 1936-8 and 3393-8. 
The Province and the States, IV : 233-5. 
Cambridge Modern History, VII : 426-30. 
American Historical Reviev^, 4 : 80-104. 
American Orations, III : 3-31, Chase; 32-49, Everett; 

50-87, Douglas. 
Parton, Peoples' Book of Biography, 196. 
Appletons' American Biographies, Art., Douglas, S. A. 
Bryant, IV : 405-9, 
Sparks' U. S., 11:191-205. 

Brown, The Lower South in American History, 1-114. 
Davis, Rise and Fall of Confed. Gov't., I : ch. II, V. 



NOTE BOOK. 81 

General Stat. Kan., 1901, pp. 25-32. Also, 1889, 1 : 42-9. 
Prentis, Hist, of Kan., chaps. I-VII, esp. VI. Also, pp. 

301-35. 
McLaughlin, Lewis Cass. 
Lothrop, WiUiam H. Seward. 
Macy, chaps. XIII, XIV and XVII. 
Wilson's Slave Power, II : ch. XXX, XXXI, etc. 
Brower, Memoirs, vol. I, Quiviri; vol. II, Harahey. 
Thwaites, Early Western Travels, 1748-1846. 
Inman, The Old Santa Fe Trail. 
The Old Salt Lake Trail. 
Parkman, Tlie Oregon Trail. 
Richardson, Beyond the Mississippi. 



82 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XL. 

a The Kansas Struggle, 1854-1861. 

b — Territorial Government. 

c — The Fraudulent Elections — "Popular Sovereignty" 

in practice. 
d — Method of Admitting a State to the Union (January 

29, 1861). 
e — The Topeka Constitution. 

1. Reasons for it. 2, Precedents. 3. Leaders. 
4. Its Fate. 
/ — The Lecompton Constitution. 

1. Buchannan's Attitude and Why? Its Fate. 
g — The Minneola-Leavenv^orth Constitution. 
h — The Wyandotte Constitution. 

1. Its Pinal Passage Through the U. S. Senate. 
i 1. Eli Thayer, 2. Amos A. Lawrence, 3. Chas. Robin- 
son, 4. Jas. H. Lane, 5. Samuel C. Pomeroy, 6. 
John Brown, 7. The Territorial Governors. 
Jc Founding Towns and Locating the State Capital. 

1. Lawrence, 2. Topeka, 3. Manhattan, 4. Wyan- 
dotte, 5. Westport, 6. Pawnee, 7. Shawnee Mis- 
sion, 8. Lecompton, 9. Leavenworth, 10. Atchi- 
son, 11. Franklin. 
I The Great Seal of the State of Kansas. 
m Sumner's "Crime Against Kansas" and Brooks' As- 
sault. 



Text, 313-316. 

Guide, 396-7. 

Hodder, Local Government of Kansas, 5-26. Excellent. 

Burgess, 407-49, 460-75. 

MacDonald, 413, 435. 

Elson, 586-95, 604-8. 

Lalor, Art., Kansas. 

Greeley, American Conflict, 1 : 224-51, 279-99. 

Wilson, 185-7, 199-200, 202-4. 

Johnston, 170-8, 184-8, 195. 

Adams and Trent, 329-32, 336-9. 

McLaughlin, 394-7, 401-2, 407. 



NOTE BOOK. 83 

Davidson, 362-76. 

Larned, 1936-38, 3398-9, 3403-4. 

Bryant, IV: ch. XVI. 

Spring, Kansas. 

Brown, Stephen A. Douglas, esp. 98-101, 104-11. 

Rhodes, vol. II, see table of contents. 

Wilson's Presidents, 262-75, 277-98. 

Chautauquan, vol. 31, No. 4, July, 1900, pp. 345-52. 

Amer. Hist. Rev., 4 : 80-104, 6 : 38-48. 

The Province and the States, IV : 235-78. 

Robinson, The Kansas Conflict. 

Sanborn, Life and Letters of John Brown — Liberator 

and Martyr. 
Eli Thayer, The Kansas Crusade. 
Richard Cordley, Pioneer Days in Kansas. 
Wilcjler, Annals of Kansas. 
Blackmar, Life of Charles Robinson. 
Redpath, Life of John Brown. 

American Orations, III : 88-120, Sumner; 121-8, Brooks. 
Appletons', Art., Brown, John, 404-7. 
Speer, Life of General James H. Lane. 
Noble Prentis, History of Kansas, chaps. VII-XV, 

XXXIX, pp. 332-5, etc. 
111. Scott, Reconstruction, p. 1, etc. 
See Laws of Kansas, 1901, p. 763. 
Story, Charles Sumner. 
Mag. of Amer. Hist., XXIX : 348-59. 



84 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XLI. 

a Campaign and Election of 1856. 

1. Parties, 2. Candidates, 3. Platforms. 
h James Buchanan and His Administration. 
c The Dred Scott Decision. 

d The Lincoln-Douglas Debates, 1858— "Tlie Crisis." 
e Uncle Tom's Cabin, 1852. 
/Helper's "Impending Crisis," 1857. 
, g Review the history of political parties in the United 

States, including dates, leaders and principles for 

which each party stood. 



Text, 314-317. 

Guide, 397-400. 

Stanwood, 258-79. 

Burgess, 449-60. 

Elson, 595-603. 

Greeley, American Conflict, 1 : 251-64. 

Lalor, Art., Dred Scott Case. 

Boyd, 471-91, Scott vs. Sandford. 

MacDonald, 416-35. 

Morse's Abraham Lincoln, 1 : 111-60, esp. 118-19. 

Brown's Stephen A. Douglas, 104, 112-41, esp. 124. 

Churchin, "Tlie Crisis," esp. 145 and 156. 

McLaugWin, 398-403. 

Davidson, 368-84. 

Johnston, 179-83. 

Wilson's Presidents, 277-300. Also, in Appletons'. 

Wilson, 197, 201. 

Adams and Trent, 326-29, 332-36. 

Lamed, 3399-3402, 3392-3. 

American Orations, III : c 129-53, 154-97; d 168-93. See 

195-229. 
Appletons', Arts., Lincoln; Fremont; Scott, Dred. 
Sparks' Men, esp. 358-77. 

Read "The Present Crisis," a poem by Lowell in 1845. 
Sparks' U. S., II : 205-17. See 218-36. 
Macy, chaps. XV and XVI. 
Wilson, Slave Power, II : ch. XXIX, etc. 



NOTE BOOK. 85 



86 AMERICAN HISTORY 



LESSON XLII. 



a Campaign and Election of 1860. 

1. Parties, 2. Candidates, 3. Platforms. Results: 
4. Presidential Vote, 5. Congress. 
h The Republican Party — Origin and Composition, 
c Abraham Lincoln — Biography, Character, Policy. 
d Lincoln's Cabinet. 

e Did results of election justify secession? 
/Why did the Southern States secede? 
g What was the attitude of the government toward 
slavery? 



Text, a 326, 331, h 313, c 334, 378, d 335, e 327,/ 318, 331. 

Guide, sees. 201, 203, 208. Also, pp. 184-5 and 193-4. 

Wilson, 204-10, 216-18. 

Elson, 608-15. 

Stanwood, 279-97. See also, 258-78. 

McLaughlin, 409-10, c and d 417. 

Davidson, 377-9, 395-8. 

Beacon Lights, vol. XII, Abraham Lincoln. 

American Orations, IV : c 16-31, /32-8. 

Wilson's Presidents, 300-35. Also, in Appletons'. 

Johnston, 188-99. 

Burgess, Civil War, vol. I, esp. chaps. I and III. 

Lalor, Art., Republican Party. 

Sparks' Men, chap. XII. 

Greeley, I : chap. XXI. 

Sparks' U. S., 11:237-48. 

Goldwin Smith, 207-38. 

Larned, 3405-6, 17-21. 

Rhodes, vol. II, ch. XI, vol. Ill, ch. XIII, etc. 

Davis, Confederate Government, I : ch. VII, IX, and X. 

d Dana, Recollections of the Civil War, 168-86. 

Morse, Abraham Lincoln. 

Schurz, Abraham Lincoln. 

Adams and Trent, 332-42, 353-5. 

Scott, Reconstruction, chap. XL 

Historians' History, 391-408. 

Weles' Lincoln and Seward. 

Herndon's Lincoln. 



NOTE BOOK. 87 

Macy, chaps. XIV, XVIII, XXI and XXII. 
Wilson, Slave Power, II : chaps. LIV and LV. 
Amer. Hist. Rev., IV: 652-64. 
Scribner's Magazine, 14 : 645-56. 



88 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XLIII. 

a Secession of Seven States before March 4, 1861. 

h Secession of Four States later. 

c The Border States— What and Why? 

d The Theory of Secession — Compare Nulhfication. 

e The Process of Secession — Compare Ratification of 

the U. S. Const, and Admission of States. 
/The Object of Secession. Expectation of Success. 
g Blunders of the South. 
h Apathy of the North. 
i The Confederate States of America, 1861-65. 



Text, a 330, b map 330, c 337,/ 318, 331, g 332, h 328-329, 

333, i 343. 
Guide, sees. 205-207, i 209. 
Wilson, 210-16, 239-44. 
Elson, 624-46, 651-5. 
McLaughlin, 410-16 and map. 
Davidson, 379-81, c 400, 402. 
American Orations, III : 230-35-46-75-93-320-33. 
Burgess, Civil War, vol. I, esp. chap. IV. 
Lalor, Art., Border States. 

Confederate States. 

Rebellion, The (in U. S. Hist.) 

Insurrection (U. S.) 

Secession. 

State Sovereignty. 
Greeley, I : chaps. XXII-XXVII, XXX and XXXVII. 
Powell, Nullification and Secession, chap. VII. 
Sparks' U. S., 11:246-58. 
Goldwin Smith, 238-301. 
Larned, 3406-16. 
Rhodes, III : chap. XIV. 

Davis, Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government. 
Adams and Trent, 342-8, 60-5 and map. 
Scott, Reconstruction During Civil War, chaps. I, XII. 
Historians' History, 408-25. 
Stevens' War betv^een the States. 
Review of Stevens' War between the States. 
Wilson, Slave Power, III : esp. chaps. IX and XI. 
Amer. Hist. Rev., II : 279-93, 461-71. 



NOTE BOOK. 89 



90 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XLIV. 

a North and South Compared, Numbers, Industry, etc. 
&— Before the War, 1860. 
[c — During the Progress of War, 1861-5. 
fZ— After the War, 1865. 

(The New South — See Lesson 49.) 
e Financial Measures During the War. 

1. Tariff, 2. Other Taxes, 3. Paper Money, 4. Na- 
tional Banks. 
/Effects of the Blockade. 

1. On the South. 

2. On England, etc. 



Text, I) 319-325, c 338-339, d 374-377, e 340-343, / 344. 

Guide, sees, a 204, e 211, 232. 

Wilson, 244-52. 

Elson, 616-23, 647-9, 704-6, e 730-2, 

McLaughlin, 403-7, 420, 425-6, e 448-52. 

Davidson, 382-94, 455-60. 

Burgess, Civil War, vol. I, esp. chap. V. Also, vol. II. 

Lalor, Art., United States Notes, esp. Legal-Tender 

Cases, pp. 986 ff. 
Greeley, I : ch. XXXI. 
McClure's Magazine, September, 1904. 
Sparks' U. S., II : 259-81. 
Larned, 3463, 3559-60, 62. 
Rhodes, vol. Ill, chap. XII. 
Brov^n, Lower South, 155-90. 
Adams and Trent, 348-51, 59-60. 

Wright, Industrial Evolution of the U. S., esp. ch. XII. 
White, Money and Banking, ch. XVI. 
Dewey, chaps. XII, XIII and pp. 360-7. 
H. Adams, Historical Essays, 279-317. 



NOTE BOOK. 91 



92 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XLV. 

a Military and Naval Operations of the War. 

h — Before 1863 — Sumpter, Bull Run, etc. 

c — 1863, especially Vicksburg and Gettysburg. 

d — After 1863, including Sherman's March and Ap- 

pomatox. 
e The Election of 1864. 

1. Candidates, Platforms, etc. 

2. Significance or Importance of the Result. 
/ Assassination of President Lincoln. 

g Results of the Civil War. 

li Read Lincoln's Gettysburg Address and Second In- 
augural. 



Text, h 336, 345-357, c 360-362, d 364-369, 372, e 371, / 373. 
Guide, sec. 210. 

Wilson, h 218-21, 223-6, 227-30, c 230, d 233-6, fZ-/ 236-8. 
Elson, 649, 655-9, 669-703, 706-12, 716-25, c 732-46, d 748-61, 

765-72, e 761-5, / 773-6, g 780-84. 
Stanwood, 298-312. 

McLaughlin, I) 418-40, c 445-8, d 452-60, 464-70, e 460-64. 
Davidson, 398-424, c 425-37, d 437-53,/ 453-5. 
Beacon Lights, vol. XII, Robert E. Lee. 
American Orations, IV : 39-129, esp. c 123 and e 125. 
Johnston, 200-7. 
Lalor, Art., Nation, The, (in U. S. Hist.)— V: Since 1865. 

State Sovereignty, 
e Greeley, II : ch. XXX, / XXXV. 
d&g Sparks' U. S., II : 310-31. 
Larned, c 3506, e 3532-3, / 3555-7, h 3514, 49-50. 
Dodge, Bird's-Eye View of the Civil War. 
Gordon, Reminiscences of the Civil War. 
Adams and Trent, h 365-407, c 408-19, 32-5, 40-5. 
Historians' History, 425-53. 
Lee, Recollections and Letters of General Lee. 
Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant. 
Wilson, Slave Power, III : esp. ch. XXXIX. 
Amer. Hist. Rev., c IV : 665-77, d VI : 466-74. 



NOTE BOOK. 93 



94 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XLVI. 

a The Trent Affair. 

b Great Britian and the Confederate Cruisers. 

c — Alabama Claims and the Geneva Arbitration. 

d The French in Mexico. 

e Slavery and the War. 

1. Emancipation Proclamation, 2. Thirteenth Amend- 
ment. 
/ Northern Opposition to the War. 

Text, a 350, b 370, c 387, d 384, e 358-359, / 363. 

Guide, sees. 212, e 214,/ 213. 

Wilson, a 221, d 272, e 226. 

Elson, a 661-7, c 776, 819-22, d 778-80, e 712-16, / 725-30. 

McLaughlin, 429, c 485-6, d 479, e 440-4. 

Davidson, 407, c 441, 473-4, d 469^70, e 423. 

e Burgess, Civil War, esp. vol. I, ch. II, vol. II, chaps. 

XVI and XX. 
Lalor, Art., Slavery (in U. S. Hist.). 

Abolition and Abolitionists III. 

Rebellion, The (in U. S. Hist.). 

Emancipation Proclamation. 

Trent Affair. 

Alabama Claims. 

Geneva Arbitration. 
e Greeley, vol. II, chaps. XI, XII, XXII. 
Bryant, IV: 601. 
Larned, e 3453, 62, 4, 73, 6, 80-2, 87-8, 3549,/ 3447, 96-9, 

3541. 
Adams and Trent, 369, 94-7, 402-7, 19-21. 
Historians' History, a 424, e 435, c 448. 
Seward, The Diplomatic History of the War for the 

Union. 
Callahan, Dixjlomatic History of the Southern Confed- 
eracy. 
Blaine, Twenty Years in Congress. 
Lothrop, William H. Seward. 
Wilson, Slave Power, III, esp. ch. XXVIII. 
Poster, Century of American Diplomacy, ch. X, XL 
New International Encyclopasdia, Art., Alabama Claims. 



NOTE BOOK. 95 



96 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XLVII. 

a Reconstruction. 

& — President Johnson's Plan. Cp. Lincoln's, 
c — Congressional Method — Its Justification. 
d Impeachment of President Johnson. 

1. Biography, 2. Character, 3. Trial and Results. 
e Texas vs. White. 
/Preedman's Bureau. 
Q Ku Klux Klan. 
li Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. 

Text, a 385-6, h 379, c 382, d 383, / 380, li 381, 386. 

Wilson, 253-71. 

Elson, 786-812. 

McLaughhn, 470-85. 

Davidson, 461-73. 

American Orations, IV : 129-91, esp. h 168-80 and c 149, etc. 

Wilson's Presidents, 336-45. Also in Appletons'. 

Johnston, 207-18. 

Burgess, Reconstruction. See table of contents. 

Lalor, Art., Treason. 

Reconstruction (in U. S. Hist.). 

Imi^eachments VI. 
II II Ku Klux Klan. 

Preedman's Bureau. 
e Boyd's Cases, 552-62. 

Dunning, Essays on the Civil War and Reconstruction. 
Sparks' U. S., 11:282-309. 
Larned, 3518-19, 51-3, 60,/ 63, 64-71. 
(/Brown, Lower South, 191-228. 
Scott, Reconstruction During the Civil War, esp. chaps. 

XII-XX. 
Adams and Trent, 446-57. 
Historians' History, 454-78. 
Guide, 194-5. 
Wilson, Slave Power, vol. III. 



NOTE BOOK. 97 



P 



98 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON XLVIII. 

a Presidential Election of 1868. 

1. Platform, 2. Candidates, 3. Results, North and 
South. 
h Presidential Election of 1872. 

1. Candidates, 2. Parties, 3. Platforms, 4. Results, 
c The Disputed Election of 1876. 

1. Platforms, 2. Candidates, 3. Parties. 

4. Political and Governmental Condition of the Time. 

5. Electoral Commission — Composition and Work. 

6. Laws Concerning the Case, Then and Now. 
d Hayes and the Beginning of a New Epoch. 



Text, a 385, c 388-90. 
Guide, sec. 212. 

Stanwood, a 313-32, 6 333-55, c 356-93. 
Wilson, 271-87. 
Elson, 813-42, esp. 832-41. 
McLaughlin, 487-505. 
Davidson, 469-82. 

Wilson's Presidents and Appletons' Biographies. 
Johnston, 218-50. 

Burgess, Reconstruction, esp. c chap. XIII. 
Lalor, Art., Disputed Elections, IV. 
" " Electoral Commission. 
" Salary Grab. 



(( 



Larned, c 3577, 



Adams and Trent, esp. 462-72. 



NOTE BOOK. 



100 AMERICAN HISTORY 



LESSON XLIX. 



a Recent Political History, Including Presidential Elec" 
tions. 

1. Garfield, Arthur, Blaine, Harrison, Cleveland, 

McKinley, Roosevelt, and Bryan. 

2. Protective Tariff. The Money Issue. 

3. Territorial Expansion and Government of Colo- 

nies. 
h Civil Service Reform. 

1. Garfield Assassinated, 
c Recent Growth and Present Condition of the United 

States. 
d The New South and its Problems. 



Text, a 391, 393, h 392, c 394-399. 

Wilson, 288-99. 

Elson, 843-77. 

McLaughlin, 505-28. 

Davidson, 475-7, 483-98. 

Stan wood. 

Wilson's Presidents and Appletons' Biographies. 

American Orations, IV:a2. 202-72 and 273-66, also h 

367-400-23. 
Johnston, 250 to end. 
Lalor, Art., Protection. 

Protection in the United States. 

Tammany Hall. 

Civil Service Reform. 
Sparks' U. S., II : 332-78. 
Lamed, 3572. 

Brown, Lower South, 249-71. 
Adams and Trent, 536-42. 
Historians' History, 478-502. 
Page, The Negro : The Southerner's Problem. 
Murphy, The Present South. 
Dewey, chaps. XIV-XX. 
d The Southern States, a Magazine, 4 : 477-98. 



NOTE BOOK. 101 



102 AMERICAN HISTORY 

LESSON L. 

a The Cuban Question — Past, Present, Future. 
b The Spanish War, 1898. 
c Effects of the War within the United States. 
d New Position of America, esp. in the Orient. 
e Annexation of Hawaii. 

1. Method, 2. History of the Islands. 
/ Some International Questions and Relations. 
g The Philippines and Their Government. 
h Porto Rico and Its Government. 



Text, 400-404. 

Guide, sec. 199. 

Elson, 878-911. 

McLaughlin, 529-47. 

Davidson, 474, 498-520. 

Lalor, Art., Ostend Manifesto. 

Sandwich Islands. 

United States of America, esp. I-III in vol. 
Ill, pp. 989-1007.— An excellent review. 
Greeley, American Conflict, vol. I, ch. XIX. 
Larned, 638-40. 
Rhodes, II : 10-44. 
Adams and Trent, 467, 514-35. 
Prentis, History of Kansas, 256-70, 369-79. 
Stuntz, The Philippines and the Par East. 
Worcester, Tlie Philippine Islands. 
Poster, American Diplomacy in the Orient. 
Reinsch, World Politics, part V. 
Wilson's Slave Power, II, ch. XLVIL 
Annals Amer. Acad. Polit. and Soc. Science, July, 1905. 
World's Work, Aug., 1905, pp. 6465-74. 
Atlantic Monthly, 87 : 289-99. 



NOTE BOOK. 



103 



I 



I 



I 



lEWlr'lO 



